OCR Text |
Show to injure both. The risk of accident by train is not half ! bo great as the certainty of imbibing virulent poison from one to two hours daily in unventilated cars. A sanitary commission is needed to set the strict, unbiased un-biased facts of the matter before railway managers. Shirley Dare in New York J Herald. j Nr-rtl of rmn Air. I In public hall.' and vehicks the oppres- sion of foul air is insupportable and j amounts to direct poisoning .of the en-I en-I feebied organ. A heart, fierkmtly weak-! weak-! piied, if kept in pure, warm air, fed with j delicate, nourishing food and kept ftami 'fatigue and mental, strain, will regain strength as naturally as we get rest from sleep. It has great recuperative powers. But a half hour in the inephiHo air of a , traveling car or a public hall does more j to make recovery impossible than almost j any other canso meiitionuble. This is a ! matter which more than ever deserves to be pm-ted upon the attention of rail-I rail-I way companies, to whom tho mass of our I people must trust their lives ami health ' lv; u shave of their days quite long enough |